- Wed Jun 30, 2021 9:33 pm
#88399
Back and forth with LSAT here but I hope to follow through for this Oct or Nov's administration.
I like categorizing flaws, and maybe my thinking in attempting the above, i.e. to see a blanket rule of "many" statements always being reversible, is akin to the comparison type flaw you referred to in tonight's webinar on Common Flaws? This was re. a percent of market question. Some flaws don't seem to fit neatly into the Flawed Reasoning in LSAT Logical Reasoning Questions categories. Needing to know the size of the overall market to know how the percent of market (truly) impacts overall sales, in that situation, was a kind of comparison type flaw, but not sure where it would fit into PS's categories on the aforementioned page, although I have come across these comparison type flaws in LR practice PrepTests. In your Sumatran rhino/animals with horns example, the diagram can be drawn (reversing the animals with horns into Sumatran rhinos only as some), but this abstract example would probably not be helpful in solving a problem, but it does illustrate the problem of comparing large and small populations along a parameter that could not be termed "many" in both directions...which I suppose is why you offered up this example. I see it as similar to your markets problem tonight, just wondering if there is another category under which they could both be grouped, or is comparison type flaw as exact as one could get here?
Rachael Wilkenfeld wrote: ↑Thu Feb 25, 2021 7:24 pm Be careful jdavid. Many means more than one, and while it's nebulous the exact numbers, you can't necessarily reverse it.Hi Rachael,
For example, many Sumatran Rhinos have horns. Many animals with horns are not Sumatran Rhinos because there are only a handful left in the world. We can't reverse that term many because it would be applying to different sized populations.
I would say that you could reverse "many" into "some." You know that there's at least one animal with horns that is a Sumatran Rhino based on the above, so it would be fair to say you know that some horned animals are Sumatran Rhinos.
Hope that helps!
Back and forth with LSAT here but I hope to follow through for this Oct or Nov's administration.
I like categorizing flaws, and maybe my thinking in attempting the above, i.e. to see a blanket rule of "many" statements always being reversible, is akin to the comparison type flaw you referred to in tonight's webinar on Common Flaws? This was re. a percent of market question. Some flaws don't seem to fit neatly into the Flawed Reasoning in LSAT Logical Reasoning Questions categories. Needing to know the size of the overall market to know how the percent of market (truly) impacts overall sales, in that situation, was a kind of comparison type flaw, but not sure where it would fit into PS's categories on the aforementioned page, although I have come across these comparison type flaws in LR practice PrepTests. In your Sumatran rhino/animals with horns example, the diagram can be drawn (reversing the animals with horns into Sumatran rhinos only as some), but this abstract example would probably not be helpful in solving a problem, but it does illustrate the problem of comparing large and small populations along a parameter that could not be termed "many" in both directions...which I suppose is why you offered up this example. I see it as similar to your markets problem tonight, just wondering if there is another category under which they could both be grouped, or is comparison type flaw as exact as one could get here?